This Article is From May 07, 2016

Rules Violated Since Beginning in AgustaWestland Deal, CAG Report Said: 10 Facts

Rules Violated Since Beginning in AgustaWestland Deal, CAG Report Said: 10 Facts

Highlights

  • UPA government broke own rules to award deal, said the August 2013 report
  • Choppers never tested, trials done on representative choppers: Report
  • As the bribery scandal broke, CBI began probe in 2012
New Delhi: As dust rises in Parliament over the AgustaWestland VVIP chopper deal, a report by the Comptroller and Auditor General on the issue is being frequently quoted by the debating lawmakers. The report, released in Parliament in August 2013, said then UPA government had broken its own procurement rules to award the 3,700-crore contract for 12 helicopters to Italian-owned AgustaWestland.

Here's what the CAG report said:

  1. The Defence Ministry did not stick to the rules from the beginning to the end, the report said. Several instances were observed in which the ministry "deviated from the 2006 Defence Procurement Procedure".

  2. The specifications of the choppers, meant for use by top politicians, including the Prime Minister, were altered, "leading to restricted competition and ultimately a single-vendor situation," the top auditing body said.

  3. During the tendering process, the cabin height requirement was increased by 1.8 m. The flying height of the choppers was reduced from 6,000 ft to 4,500 ft, making AgustaWestland the only eligible vendor, the CAG report said.

  4. A higher base price had been set for the purchase of the helicopters, which provided no "realistic basis for obtaining an assurance about the reasonableness of the cost of procurement of AW101 helicopters," the report said.

  5. The reports said contrary to the practice of conducting chopper flying trials at home, former Air Force Chief Fali Major decided to do it abroad.

  6. The Air Force never tested the AW-101 chopper. Field trials of the AgustaWestland chopper were conducted on representative helicopters -- Merlin MK-3A and Civ-01 and on a mock-up of the passenger cabin, the CAG said.

  7. Three helicopters were delivered to India before the deal ran into trouble in February 2013.

  8. As the bribery scandal unfolded, beginning in Italy, India froze payments to the company. AgustaWestland denied any wrongdoing and asked India to pay the due amount. In 2012, three of the promised 12 choppers were delivered.

  9. The CBI is questioning Fali Major's predecessor, former Air Marshall SP Tyagi, who allegedly received kickbacks for influencing the deal in favour of AgustaWestland. Mr Tyagi has denied the allegations.

  10. The CBI had started investigating the case in 2012, naming SP Tyagi and 13 others in the case.



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